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'Football doesn't belong to you!'

Bayern Munich striker Thomas Muller gets slated by San Marino in heartwarming letter

Germany international said he 'doesn't see the point' in playing games against the likes of San Marino

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SAN MARINO are mad as hell and they're not gonna take it anymore.

Lots of people in the football world have questioned why higher ranking countries should have to face teams like San Marino, but few have been as dismissive as Germany's Thomas Muller.

 Thomas Muller can't see the point in playing the likes of San Marino
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Thomas Muller can't see the point in playing the likes of San MarinoCredit: Reuters
 Bayern Munich chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge also thinks fixtures against the minnows should be scrapped
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Bayern Munich chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge also thinks fixtures against the minnows should be scrappedCredit: Getty Images

After the world champions' 8-0 win in the tiny nation, he said: “I don't understand the point of such uneven games like these, even more so because of the crowded fixture list.

"I understand that for them it is special to play against the world champions, I understand also that they can only defend with tough tackling.

"For this reason, though, I wonder if these are not games which bring unnecessary risks.”

And Bayern Munich's firebrand chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge said: “San Marino has got nothing to do with professional football.”

But neither could have expected San Marino to send such a fiery response.

The country's director of communications wrote a ten-point letter to Muller, mocking him for failing to score in the match and ridiculing the 'bullying' Germans for wearing socks and sandals.

 Muller wears something like this under his Germany kit, according to San Marino
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Muller wears something like this under his Germany kit, according to San MarinoCredit: Splash News
 Rummenigge (right) gets in on the act with Carlo Ancelotti at Oktoberfest
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Rummenigge (right) gets in on the act with Carlo Ancelotti at OktoberfestCredit: EPA

"Dearest Thomas Muller,

You're right. The games like that on a Friday night, they're nothing. To you. On the other hand, dear Thomas, you do not need to come to San Marino for almost nothing in a weekend in which, without the Bundesliga, you could have spent with your wife on the sofa of you luxury villa or, who knows, you could have taken part in some events organised by your sponsors to bank several thousand euros. I believe you, but allow me to give 10 good reasons for which I think the San Marino-Germany match was very useful and if only you could could think about it and let me know what you think:

  1. It served to show you that not even against the teams as poor as ours you can't score a goal - and don't say you weren't pissed when Simoncini stopped you scoring...
  2. It served to make it clear to your managers (and even at Beckenbauer and Rummenigge) that football is not owned by them but by of all those who love it, among which, like it or not, WE are included.
  3. It served to remind hundreds of journalists from all over Europe that there are still guys who follow their dreams and not your rules.
  4. It served to confirm that you Germans you will never change and that history has taught you that "bullying" is not always guarantee of victory.
  5. It served to show the 200 guys in San Marino who play the game for whatever reason why their coaches ask them to always work their hardest. Who knows - maybe one day all their sacrifice will not be repaid with a game against the champions of the world.
  6. It served to your Federation (and also to ours) to collect the money of image rights with which, in addition to paying you for your trouble, they can build pitches for the kids of your own country, schools, and make football stadiums safer... Our Federation, I'll let you in on a secret, is building a new football pitch in a remote village called Acquaviva. You could build it with six months of your salary, we'll do it with the rights of 90 minutes of game. Not bad right?
  7. It served to a country as big as your pitch in Munich to go in the paper for a good reason, because a football match is always a good reason.
  8. It served to your friend Gnabry to begin with, in the national team and scoring three goals.
  9. It made some Sanmarinese people a little happy to remember that we have a real national team.
  10. It's served to make me realise that even if you wear the most beautiful adidas kits, underneath you're always the ones that put white socks under their sandals.

With Love, your Alan."

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